Authorities Tore Down Church’s Cross With the Help of Local Thugs

Last year, government officials in the township of Yugan in the city of Shangrao, Jiangxi Province, ordered a local Three-Self Church that belongs to the official united Protestant church controlled by the government, to tear down the cross on its roof because it was “too conspicuous from the road.” The members of the congregation refused and took turns protecting the church from a possible nighttime attack by the Communist Party law enforcement.

Around 6 p.m. on July 13, 2017, a township government official, 53-year-old Mr. Zhang, brought a group of people to the church and asked to be let inside. When a member of the congregation opened the door for them, they burst into the church and started to fiercely hammer on the metal door leading to the rooftop, eventually breaking it open. When they got to the roof, a few of them started pounding on the cross with hammers. The lawyer hired by the church rushed to the roof and asked why they were breaking in and destroying the cross. “Isn’t this what bandits do?” added the director. The imposters ignored him and continued tearing down the cross but were unsuccessful in removing it because of its sturdy structure.

The next morning, over 200 believers, having learned about the events of the previous night, spontaneously converged at the church to protect it. Seeing so many believers, the township official did not dare to proceed, and, around midday, the believers started to disperse. About 50 or 60 people remained to keep watch, and the official saw his chance to continue the destruction of the cross: he organized a group of over 60 or 70 local thugs to go to the church. The Christians were trying hard to block the stairs to the roof, but the thugs forcefully pushed them away and tore down the cross using sledgehammers and electric drills. A fight broke out between the two sides turning into chaos: some were fighting while others stood in the way to the cross trying to protect it. A 59-year-old woman was knocked unconscious and was sent to the hospital with a large wound on her head.

Along with the cross, the authorities with the help of local thugs took down from the church’s wall three brass Chinese characters “耶稣堂” meaning “the Church of Jesus.” After this incident, the congregation wanted to raise funds to erect a new cross but were threatened by the official that if they dared put up another one, the entire church would be demolished. They managed to collect over 100,000 RMB and sued the township government, but the government authorities would not hear the case.

The church after the authorities removed the crossThe church after the authorities removed the cross

Bitter Winter reports on how religions are allowed, or not allowed, to operate in China and how some are severely persecuted after they are labeled as “xie jiao,” or heterodox teachings. We publish news difficult to find elsewhere, analyses, and debates.
Placed under the editorship of Massimo Introvigne, one of the most well-known scholars of religion internationally, “Bitter Winter” is a cooperative enterprise by scholars, human rights activists, and members of religious organizations persecuted in China (some of them have elected, for obvious reasons, to remain anonymous).

Footer

Editor-in-Chief

MASSIMO INTROVIGNE

Director-in-Charge

MARCO RESPINTI

ADDRESS

CESNUR

Via Confienza 19,

10121 Turin, Italy,

Phone: 39-011-541950

E-MAIL

We welcome submission of unpublished contributions, news, and photographs. Each submission implies the authorization for us to edit and publish texts and photographs. We reserve the right to decide which submissions are suitable for publication.
Please, write to
[email protected]
Thank you.

Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list

* indicates required

Email Address *

Choose a language

English

Italiano

繁體中文

Français

한국어

Español

日本語

Deutsch

Leave this field empty if you're human:

ARCHIVES

ARCHIVES

Follow us

Download the BITTER WINTER APP now!

LINKS

By continuing to use the site, you agree to the use of cookies. more information

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.